BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The invention relates generally to articles having a damping coating. More particularly,
the invention relates to turbine engine articles, such as those exposed to hot gas
and combustion processes, the turbine engine articles having a damping coating thereon.
[0002] Typically, turbine engines and articles therein are subjected to vibrational stresses
due to the harsh environment that exists during operation of the turbine engine.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0003] A first aspect of the disclosure provides an article having a damping coating comprising
approximately 8 weight (wt) % to approximately 15 wt % Y
2O
3 and approximately 19 wt % to approximately 28 wt % Ta
2O
5 with a balanced weight of ZrO
2.
[0004] A second aspect of the disclosure provides an article for exposure to a hot gas process
in a turbine engine, the article having a damping coating comprising approximately
8 weight (wt) % to approximately 15 wt % Y
2O
3 and approximately 19 wt % to approximately 20 wt % Ta
2O
3 with a balanced weight of ZrO
2.
[0005] A third aspect of the disclosure provides an article for exposure to a combustion
process in a turbine engine, the article having a damping coating comprising approximately
8 weight (wt) % to approximately 15 wt % Y
2O
3 and approximately 19 wt % to approximately 20 wt % Ta
2O
5 with a balanced weight of ZrO
2.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0006] These and other features of this invention will be more readily understood from the
following detailed description of the various aspects of the invention taken in conjunction
with the accompanying drawings that depict various embodiments of the invention, in
which:
[0007] FIG. 1 shows a schematic illustration of an embodiment of a combustion turbine engine,
in accordance with the present invention;
[0008] FIG. 2 shows a cross-section illustration of an embodiment of an illustrative gas
turbine assembly with a three stage nozzle, in accordance with the present invention;
and
[0009] FIG. 3 shows a turbine bucket having a damping coating in an embodiment of an engine
article, in accordance with the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0010] Current means for reducing vibrational stresses on turbine engines and articles therein
have generally been mechanical in nature. Typical examples of mechanical means may
include a spring-like damper inserted in a rotor structure beneath an airfoil platform
, a damper included at an airfoil tip shroud, a pen damper, a chicklet damper, and/or
a wafer damper. The foregoing damping methods may not be entirely effective, for example,
when shank length (length from blade attachment to platform) decreases as is the case
for modem turbine blade designs. Traditional damping means may also not be entirely
effective for modes with displacement only in the outer span of an airfoil as is the
case for new large turbine blade designs.
[0011] It has been discovered that an advantage that may be realized in the practice of
some embodiments of damping coatings described herein is that a damping coating having
ferroelastic characteristics and a composition described herein on the surface of
the turbine engines and/or various articles therein reduce the vibrational stress
on the foregoing significantly during operation of the turbine engine. The damping
coating comprises a tantalum oxide doped yttria stabilized zirconia that exhibits
ferroelastic domain switching under externally applied stress (such as vibrational
stress) resulting in the dissipation of the applied stress, thereby providing damping
capability to the turbine engine and/or articles therein.
[0012] It has also been discovered that an advantage that may be realized in the practice
of some embodiments of damping coatings described herein is that the damping coatings
reduce the vibration of the turbine engine and/or articles therein, thus altering
vibrational characteristics in such a way as to increase the structural integrity
and operational life of the turbine engine and/or articles therein. It has also been
discovered that the resultant lowered fatigue stress and increased fatigue life allows
for the design of a more efficient turbine engine and/or articles therein, for example,
larger, thinner, and more efficient turbine airfoils.
[0013] Referring to FIG. 1, a schematic illustration of an embodiment of a combustion turbine
engine 100 is shown. Engine 100 includes a compressor 102 and a combustor 104. Combustor
104 includes a combustion region 105 and a fuel nozzle assembly 106. Engine 100 also
includes a turbine 108 and a common compressor/turbine shaft 110 (sometimes referred
to as rotor 110). In one embodiment, engine 100 is a MS7001FB engine, sometimes referred
to as a 9FB engine, commercially available from General Electric Company, Schenectady,
N.Y. The present invention is not limited to any one particular engine and may be
used in connection with other engines including, for example, the MS7001FA (7FA) and
MS9001FA (9FA), the GE 90, and the LMS100 engine models of General Electric Company.
Other examples also include the F119 Pratt and Whitney military engine as well as
the 8000H Siemens machine.
[0014] In operation, air flows through compressor 102 and compressed air is supplied to
combustor 104. Specifically, the compressed air is supplied to fuel nozzle assembly
106 that is integral to combustor 104. Assembly 106 is in flow communication with
combustion region 105. Fuel nozzle assembly 106 is also in flow communication with
a fuel source (not shown in FIG. 1) and channels fuel and air to combustion region
105. Combustor 104 ignites and combusts fuel. Combustor 104 is in flow communication
with turbine 108 for which gas stream thermal energy is converted to mechanical rotational
energy. Turbine 108 is rotatably coupled to and drives rotor 110. Compressor 102 also
is rotatably coupled to shaft 110. In the illustrative embodiment, there is a plurality
of combustors 104 and fuel nozzle assemblies 106.
[0015] Referring to FIG. 2, a cross-section illustration of an embodiment of an illustrative
turbine assembly 108 with a three stage nozzle that may be used with the combustion
turbine engine 100 in FIG. 1 is shown. Turbine assembly 108 includes a vane sub-assembly
112. Vane sub-assembly 112 is held in the turbine assembly 108 by a radially outer
platform 114 and a radially inner platform 116.
[0016] In an embodiment of the present invention, an article having a damping coating comprising
approximately 8 weight (wt) % to approximately 15 wt % Y
2O
3 and approximately 19 wt % to approximately 28 wt % Ta
2O
5 with a balanced weight of ZrO
2 is presented. The term balanced weight is meant to connote that the remaining percentage,
i.e., when the sum of the listed percentages of the components of the damping coating
is subtracted from a total weight percent of 100, is the wt % of ZrO
2 present in the damping coating. For example in a embodiment of the damping coating
described herein, if approximately 10 wt % of Y
2O
3 and approximately 20 wt % of Ta
2O
5 is present in the damping coating, then the balance weight of ZrO
2 present is 70 wt % [100 - (10 + 20)].
[0017] In an embodiment, the article may be a part of an engine. In another embodiment,
the engine may be an engine described in FIG. 1 and/or FIG. 2, or an engine having
articles therein that may be capable of being coated with a damping coating described
herein. In another embodiment, the engine may be selected from a group consisting
of at least one of a gas turbine engine, a rocket engine, and a super sonic combustion
ram (SCRAM) jet engine. In another embodiment, the engine may be a self sustaining
combustion engine without rotating hardware.
[0018] In an embodiment, the engine articles may be articles described in FIG. 1 and/or
FIG. 2, or engine articles that may be capable of being coated with a damping coating
described herein. In another embodiment, the articles may be selected from the group
consisting of at least one of an article for exposure to a hot gas process and/or
a combustion process. In an embodiment, the article may selected from the group consisting
of at least one of a bucket, a blade, a nozzle, a vane, a strut, a turbine casing,
and a rotor. In another embodiment, the article may be selected from the group consisting
of at least one of a fuel nozzle, a combustion casing, a combustion liner, and a transition
piece.
[0019] The damping coatings of the present invention are not limited to any one particular
turbine engine and/or articles therein, and may be used with other engines and/or
articles therein. Additionally, damping coatings of the present invention may be used
with other articles not described herein that may benefit from the ferroelastic properties
of the damping coatings described herein.
[0020] In an embodiment, the damping coating used to coat the engines and/or engine articles
described herein may comprise approximately 8 wt % to approximately 15 wt % Y
2O
3 and approximately 19 wt % to approximately 28 wt % Ta
2O
5 with a balanced weight of ZrO
2. In another embodiment, the damping coating may additionally comprise dopants, at
least one of which may be selected from oxides and rare-earth oxides. In an embodiment,
the oxides may be selected from the group consisting of at least one of CaO, MgO,
and TiO
2. In another embodiment, the rare-earth oxides may be selected from the group consisting
of at least one of CeO
2 and Yb
2O
3. In another embodiment, the oxides may be selected from the group consisting of at
least one of CaO, MgO, TiO
2, CeO
2, and Yb
2O
3.
[0021] In an embodiment of the damping coating, the coating may comprise 72.76 wt % ZrO
2, 8.02 wt % Y
2O
3, and 19.22 wt % Ta
2O
5. In another embodiment, the damping coating may comprise 85.44 wt % ZrO
2, 7.49 wt % Y
2O
3, 4.4 wt % TiO
2, and 2.67 wt % Ta
2O
5. In another embodiment, the damping coating may comprise tetragonal zirconia.
[0022] In an embodiment, the damping coating has ferroelastic properties that provide vibrational
damping at high temperatures by absorbing the vibrational stresses of the engine and/or
engine articles therein. In an embodiment, the damping coating exhibits ferroelasticity
at temperature in a range from approximately 700° C to approximately 1350° C. In another
embodiment, the damping coating exhibits ferroelasticity at approximately 760° C.
Ferroelasticity is a phenomenon in which a material may exhibit a spontaneous strain.
When a stress is applied to a ferroelastic material, a domain change will occur in
the material from one orientation to an equally stable but different orientation (a
'twin' phase). This stress-induced phase change results in a spontaneous strain in
the material.
[0023] The ferroelasticity property of the damping coating may be characterized by the existence
of a hysteresis loop between the strain ε and the applied stress. In the case of tetragonal
zirconia, the c axis of the unit cell is approximately 1% to approximately 2% larger
than the other two orthogonal axes, a and b (=a). An applied compressive stress (of
the order of the coercive stress σ
c), e.g., induced by vibration stresses, along the c-axis can promote a ferroelastic
transformation of the c-axis to one of the other two orthogonal axes with an accompanying
ferroelastic strain which is proportional to the tetragonality ratio, c/a. The ferroelastic
transformation does not occur as a simultaneous switching of all unit cells but rather
proceeds by the transformation of domains with similar orientations.
[0024] In an embodiment of the damping coating, the coating may comprise other ferroelastic
materials presently existing but not discussed in the specification or other ferroelastic
materials yet to be discovered as long as the foregoing have the criteria that the
c axis of the unit cell is approximately 1% to approximately 2% larger than the other
two orthogonal axes, a and b (=a), and that a quotient of c divided by a is greater
than 1. In another embodiment of the damping coating, the coating may comprise other
tetragonal zirconia materials presently existing but not discussed in the specification
or other tetragonal zirconia materials yet to be discovered as long as the foregoing
have the criteria that the c axis of the unit cell is approximately 1% to approximately
2% larger than the other two orthogonal axes, a and b (=a), and a quotient of c divided
by a is greater than 1.
[0025] Methods of forming the damping coatings described herein are known in the art and
for the sake of clarity, no further discussion is provided.
[0026] In an embodiment of the present invention, damping coatings described herein may
be applied to engines and/or engine parts described herein via thermal spray processes
such as air plasma, high-velocity oxyfuel spray (HVOF), and vacuum plasma spray. In
another embodiment, physical vapor deposition processes such as e-beam physical vapor
deposition (EB-PVD) may be used. The foregoing processes are known in the art and
for the sake of clarity, no further discussion is provided.
[0027] Referring to FIG. 3, an embodiment of a turbine bucket 1 of an engine article having
a damping coating 2 is shown. Various embodiments of the damping coating have been
discussed herein and for the sake of clarity, no further discussion will be provided.
In an embodiment, damping coating 2 (represented by the shaded area) may coat turbine
bucket 2 in its entirety. In another embodiment, damping coating 2 may coat a selected
surface area of turbine bucket 2.
[0028] The terms "first," "second," and the like, herein do not denote any order, quantity,
or importance, but rather are used to distinguish one element from another, and the
terms "a" and "an" herein do not denote a limitation of quantity, but rather denote
the presence of at least one of the referenced item. The modifier "approximately"
used in connection with a quantity is inclusive of the stated value and has the meaning
dictated by the context, (e.g., includes the degree of error associated with measurement
of the particular quantity). The suffix "(s)" as used herein is intended to include
both the singular and the plural of the term that it modifies, thereby including one
or more of that term (e.g., the metal(s) includes one or more metals). Ranges disclosed
herein are inclusive and independently combinable (e.g., ranges of "up to approximately
25 wt %, or, more specifically, approximately 5 wt % to approximately 20 wt %", is
inclusive of the endpoints and all intermediate values of the ranges of "approximately
5 wt % to approximately 25 wt %," etc).
[0029] While various embodiments are described herein, it will be appreciated from the specification
that various combinations of elements, variations or improvements therein may be made
by those skilled in the art, and are within the scope of the invention. In addition,
many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the
teachings of the invention without departing from essential scope thereof. Therefore,
it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed
as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention
will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
1. An article having a damping coating comprising approximately 8 weight (wt) % to approximately
15 wt % Y2O3 and approximately 19 wt % to approximately 28 wt % Ta2O5 with a balanced weight of ZrO2.
2. An article according to claim 1, wherein the article is part of an engine
3. An article according to claim 2, wherein the engine is selected from the group consisting
of at least one of a gas turbine, a rocket engine, and a super sonic ram jet engine.
4. An article according to any preceding claim, wherein the article is selected from
the group consisting of at least one of an article for exposure to a hot gas process
and an article for exposure to a combustion process.
5. An article according to claim 4, wherein the article is selected from the group consisting
of at least one of a bucket, a blade, a nozzle, a vane, a strut, a turbine casing,
and a rotor.
6. An article according to claim 4, wherein the article is selected from the group consisting
of at least one of a fuel nozzle, a combustion casing, a combustion liner, and a transition
piece.
7. An article according to any preceding claim, wherein the coating comprises tetragonal
zirconia.
8. An article according to claim 7, wherein a c axis of a unit cell of the tetragonal
zirconia is approximately 1 % to approximately 2% larger then orthogonal axes a and
b of the unit cell.
9. An article according to claim 8, wherein a quotient of the c axis divided by the a
axis is greater than 1.
10. An article according to any preceding claim, wherein the coating additionally comprises
dopants at least one of which is selected from the group consisting of CaO, MgO, TiO2, CeO2, and Yb2O3.
11. An article according to any preceding claim, wherein the coating exhibits ferroelasticity
at temperature in a range from approximately 700° C to approximately 1350° C.
12. An article according to any preceding claim, wherein the coating comprises 8.02 wt
% Y2O3, 19.22 wt % Ta2O5, and 72.76 wt % ZrO2.
13. An article according to any preceding claim, wherein the coating comprises 7.49 wt
% Y2O3, 2.67 wt % Ta2O5, 4.4 wt % TiO2, and 85.44 wt % ZrO2.
14. An article according to any preceding claim for exposure to a hot gas process in a
turbine engine, the article having a damping coating comprising approximately 8 weight
(wt) % to approximately 15 wt % Y2O3 and approximately 19 wt % to approximately 20 wt % Ta2O5 with a balanced weight of ZrO2.
15. An article according to any one of claims 1 to 13, for exposure to a combustion process
in a turbine engine, the article having a damping coating comprising approximately
8 weight (wt) % to approximately 15 wt % Y2O3 and approximately 19 wt % to approximately 20 wt % Ta2O5 with a balanced weight of ZrO2.